º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Pizza Pilgrims' co-founder on growing sustainably and the 'boring' brother's plan for the future

Thom Elliot has spent over a decade growing his and his brother's pizza empire - and he's got big plans for the future

Pizza Pilgrims: Founders and brothers James and Thom Elliot(Image: The Wharf)

Thom Elliot, co-founder of Pizza Pilgrims, has hospitality running through his blood. Over the past decade, he and his brother James have journeyed from their childhood home above their parents' pub in Cornwall to the brink of launching their 25th pizzeria this November.

Hailing from a lineage of hospitality professionals, the siblings have methodically ascended from a modest stall in Soho to their current success, as reported by .

Elliot, who dubs himself the "boring brother" is deeply passionate about product quality, environmental sustainability evidenced by the company's recent B-corp accreditation and advocates for the benefits of gradual and sustainable expansion.

"We spent quite a lot of time like trying to pump the brakes rather accelerate," he remarks. "We've really tried to grow within our means."

His love for the hospitality sector is palpable: "[Hospitality] is the university of people... you spend your life in a situation with people from all walks of life... you learn so much about working in a team, dealing with difficult people, happy people."

Yet, he concedes that it's been a challenging path: "As an industry, it's just been through so much in the last three-four years and it's it pushes you at the best of times."

(Image: WalesOnline/ Rob Browne)

‘The biggest challenge for hospitality is consumer sentiment’

As the hospitality sector contends with challenges brought on by the pandemic and the inflation-driven cost-of-living crisis, sector leaders are increasingly vocal about the need for tax reform and relief. The response to the Autumn Budget's 40 per cent business rate relief and the 1.2 per cent rise in employers' national insurance contributions (NICs) was one of disappointment amongst many, apprehensive about escalating costs.

Elliot, despite the circumstances, maintains a measure of optimism: "We've broadly seen [that] demand is there."